I don't want to use an integer, because I don't want to have to read the value to increment it.
UPDATE Table SET
IntColumn = IntColumn + 1
While that does technically require a read, I don't see any problems with it.
You could always just update to the same value:
UPDATE Table SET
SomeColumn = SomeColumn
which will trigger rowversion update as well.
ADDITION: You could do a view with the max rowversion of the children:
SELECT Parent.*, MaxChildRowVersion as ChildVersion
FROM Parent
JOIN (
SELECT ParentId, MAX(RowVersion) as MaxChildRowVersion
FROM Child
GROUP BY ParentId
) as Child ON
Parent.ParentId = Child.ParentId
But, no, you can't directly update a rowversion column (though you could implement your own updatable with @@DBTS, binary(8) and INSTEAD OF triggers...)
Could you give examples of your last point? It sounds promising.
No, really it doesn't. ;) It's too much work when you could just update to the same value instead or use a view. Those are the 2 easiest options.
But, to be complete, a binary(8) column with a default of @@DBTS (which returns the database version number), and an AFTER UPDATE trigger that also updates the binary column to the new @@DBTS will give you a psuedo-rowversion type that you can then update manually. It'd be no faster or better than just updating some other column to it's same value though.